Israeli-Arab summit convenes, Blinken seeks to reassure allies on Iran

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken is welcomed by Israeli officials on his arrival at Ben Gurion airport in Lod, near the Israeli city of Tel Aviv, on March 26, 2022. (Jacquelyn Martin / POOL / AFP)
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Updated 27 March 2022
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Israeli-Arab summit convenes, Blinken seeks to reassure allies on Iran

  • Blinken: US believes that restoring nuclear deal “is the best way to put Iran’s program back in the box it was in”
  • He also vowed to cooperate with Israel to counter Iran’s “aggressive behavior” across the region

SDE BOKER, Israel: Israeli and Arab partners convened for a rare summit in Israel on Sunday attended by US Secretary of State Antony Blinken, who sought to reassure the US allies over Washington’s diplomacy with Iran.
The issue is likely to dominate the two-day gathering, which includes foreign ministers from three Arab states that normalized ties with Israel in 2020.
Blinken’s visit comes as some US allies in the region question President Joe Biden administration’s commitment and brace for fallout from an Iranian nuclear deal and the Ukrainian crisis.
The nuclear talks had been close to an agreement several weeks ago until Russia made last-minute demands of the United States, insisting that sanctions imposed on Moscow over its invasion of Ukraine should not affect its trade with Iran.
Restoring a 2015 nuclear deal “is the best way to put Iran’s nuclear program back in to the box it was in,” Blinken said.
But whether or not that happens, “our commitment to the core principle of Iran never acquiring a nuclear weapon is unwavering,” he said alongside Israeli counterpart Yair Lapid in Jerusalem, before the summit got under way.
“The United States will continue to stand up to Iran when it threatens us or when it threatens our allies and partners,” Blinken said. 
After talks with Blinken, Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett, who has cautioned that a nuclear deal with Iran would not be binding on Israel, said he hoped Washington “will hear the concerned voices from the region, Israel’s and others’.”
Attending the Lapid-hosted summit in a desert hotel will be the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Morocco, which were part of the so-called Abraham Accords brokered by the Trump administration to normalize ties with Israel.
Egypt’s foreign minister, whose country on Saturday marked 43 years of peace with Israel, will also join the summit.
“Normalization is becoming the new normal in the region,” Blinken said, adding that Washington hoped “to bring others in.”
But violence flared inside Israel, where two suspected Arab gunmen killed two people in the city of Hadera, 50 km (30 miles) north of Tel Aviv, before they were shot dead, police said.
Before traveling to the summit venue, Blinken held talks in the occupied West Bank with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas. Blinken said Washington remained committed to a two-state solution of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, but noted “the two sides are very far apart.”
The venue for the foreign ministers’ meeting is Sde Boker, where Israel’s founding father and first prime minister, David Ben-Gurion, retired and is buried. The remote Negev desert farm collective has long been a symbol of Israeli innovation.
Sde Boker may also have provided an uncontroversial alternative to Jerusalem, which Israel considers its capital — a status not recognized by most countries in the absence of a resolution to Palestinian claims on the city. 


Syrian government says it controls prison in Raqqa with Daesh-linked detainees

Updated 23 January 2026
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Syrian government says it controls prison in Raqqa with Daesh-linked detainees

  • Prison holds detainees linked to Daesh, and witnessed ⁠clashes in its vicinity between advancing Syrian government forces and Kurdish fighters

Syria’s Interior Ministry said on Friday it had taken over Al-Aktan prison in the city of Raqqa ​in northeastern Syria, a facility that was formerly under the control of Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF).

The prison has been holding detainees linked to the militant group Daesh, and witnessed clashes in its vicinity this week between advancing Syrian government forces and the SDF.

It ‌was not ‌immediately clear how many ‌Daesh ⁠detainees ​remain in Al-Aktan ‌prison as the US military has started transferring up to 7,000 prisoners linked to the militant Islamist group from Syrian jails to neighboring Iraq. US officials say the detainees are citizens of many countries, including in Europe.

“Specialized teams were ⁠formed from the counter-terrorism department and other relevant authorities to ‌take over the tasks of guarding ‍and securing the prison ‍and controlling the security situation inside it,” ‍the Interior Ministry said in a statement.

Under a sweeping integration deal agreed on Sunday, responsibility for prisons housing Daesh detainees was meant to be transferred to ​the Syrian government.

The SDF said on Monday it was battling Syrian government forces near ⁠Al-Aktan and that the seizure of the prison by the government forces “could have serious security repercussions that threaten stability and pave the way for a return to chaos and terrorism.”

The US transfer of Daesh prisoners follows the rapid collapse of Kurdish-led forces in northeast Syria. Concerns over prison security intensified after the escape on Tuesday of roughly 200 low-level Daesh fighters from Syria’s ‌Shaddadi prison. Syrian government forces later recaptured many of them.